We've gathered all that info for you so you have a checklist of your own of sort. It's everything you need to know about which checkups and tests to get done, when -- all in one place!

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With all the possible screening tests out there, you'd think this would be a HUGE list. But guess what? It's a lot simpler than that.

The Stir spoke with Dr. Vanessa Maier, assistant professor of family medicine at University Hospitals Case Medical Center, who said it all boils down to (almost) one thing: Get that annual physical exam with your primary care physician.

When it comes to choosing which preventative screening tests you need, "it's really important to have a primary care physician to help you make those decisions," Maier says. "It's really [their] role to know what the guidelines are and to tailor them to each person."

Still, there are basics all women should at least be aiming for, according to Maier:

A surprising number of screenings have become controversial, even the formerly routine exams that detect breast cancer. This is partly because the guidelines keep changing.

Maier recommends using the National Cancer Institute's Breast Cancer Risk Assessment Tool and bringing the results of that to your physician to begin a conversation about which screenings you need, when.

Likewise, Maier says women over 30 should consider having a pap smear and a Human Papillomavirus (HPV) test.

"Those two tests together can help each woman and her physician decide how often she should get cervical cancer screenings," she said. The CDC's chart comparing guidelines for cervical cancer screenings as of 2012 can also help.

Can't remember when you last had your tetanus shot?

"Just get one," Maier recommends. It's not going to harm you if it's been less than 10 years since your last shot.

Other tests you should ask your doctor about:

Pap smears starting at age 21 for sexually active women

Screening for chlamydia, gonorrhea, HIV, and other sexually transmitted diseases

Mammogram and other breast cancer screenings like sonograms starting around age 40 or earlier if there's a family history; pregnant and breastfeeding women cannot have them

Diabetes

Do you manage to see the same primary care physician every year for an exam?